Source: Elizabeth Ricci
Rosa Miranda was brought to the US from Mexico when she was ten years old is concerned for her job and family. Miranda, a so-called Dreamer, is now married to a US citizen and the mother of an American daughter, has earned an associate’s degree, a B.S. in Rural Studies Social and Community Development, as well as a Masters in Sociology in the US.
“DACA has allowed me to have jobs in which I help others. My last job was as a care manager for a Federal Qualified Health Clinic in a very rural, almost forgotten region, of North Carolina. There, I helped anyone that walked through those clinic doors and needed more than a primary care provider. I made a difference, I changed people’s lives, and all this was possible because in 2012 a president believed young individuals like myself who just wanted an opportunity to success, deserved to have a document that will allow them to work,” said Miranda.
If the Supreme Court upends DACA, essential doctors, nurses, respiratory therapists and visiting health aid will lose their jobs. That prospect is cause for concern for Dreamers Miranda.
“My professional career is at a limbo. The possibility of being deported because of a decision made by my parents 17 years ago, is very real. The uncertainty and anxiety grow every day. I try to remain hopeful, because I know this is home. I know my daughter needs the opportunities America has given me,” Miranda explained.
The Supreme Court’s decision could come any time soon. If the court ends DACA, Dreamers may have alternatives such as orders of supervision, the U visa or direct deferred action. We will have to wait and see. Chief Justice Roberts will likely cast the deciding vote.